Soils are an important sink for persistent organic pollutants (POPs), and high mountain soils are considered a stable reservoir for many compounds due to their high organic matter content. This study focuses on the small-scale variability on the environmental distribution of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) in mountain soils. Several soil samples taken from May 2007 to June 2008 in a small area at around 1,900 m∈a.s.l. (Italian Central Alps) were analyzed for DDT compounds. Pedological analyses were done as well. Organic matter content, soil layer, differences in solar radiation, and sampling period were considered as possible variability factors. Organic matter content can account for a DDT concentration difference of a factor 3 among different sites, soil layer can account for a concentration difference of a factor near 2, differences in solar radiation values do not seem to affect DDT concentrations, whereas the sampling period has the greatest influence with a difference factor of three to four among different sampling dates. Summing all these variability factors together, even though operating on such a small scale, we obtain a predicted spatial variability depending on the considered variables near to one order of magnitude. In particular, it was surprising that seasonal variations could be so great. If this conclusion is to be confirmed in the future, this element must be considered very carefully by scientists and environmental agencies during monitoring campaigns. © 2010 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.

Tremolada, P., Comolli, R., Parolini, M., Moia, F., Binelli, A. (2011). One year cycle of DDT concentrations in high—altitude soils. WATER AIR AND SOIL POLLUTION, 217(1-4), 407-419 [10.1007/s11270-010-0596-5].

One year cycle of DDT concentrations in high—altitude soils

COMOLLI, ROBERTO;
2011

Abstract

Soils are an important sink for persistent organic pollutants (POPs), and high mountain soils are considered a stable reservoir for many compounds due to their high organic matter content. This study focuses on the small-scale variability on the environmental distribution of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) in mountain soils. Several soil samples taken from May 2007 to June 2008 in a small area at around 1,900 m∈a.s.l. (Italian Central Alps) were analyzed for DDT compounds. Pedological analyses were done as well. Organic matter content, soil layer, differences in solar radiation, and sampling period were considered as possible variability factors. Organic matter content can account for a DDT concentration difference of a factor 3 among different sites, soil layer can account for a concentration difference of a factor near 2, differences in solar radiation values do not seem to affect DDT concentrations, whereas the sampling period has the greatest influence with a difference factor of three to four among different sampling dates. Summing all these variability factors together, even though operating on such a small scale, we obtain a predicted spatial variability depending on the considered variables near to one order of magnitude. In particular, it was surprising that seasonal variations could be so great. If this conclusion is to be confirmed in the future, this element must be considered very carefully by scientists and environmental agencies during monitoring campaigns. © 2010 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
POP distribution, DDT, Seasonal contamination, Mountain contamination, Soil contamination
English
2011
217
1-4
407
419
none
Tremolada, P., Comolli, R., Parolini, M., Moia, F., Binelli, A. (2011). One year cycle of DDT concentrations in high—altitude soils. WATER AIR AND SOIL POLLUTION, 217(1-4), 407-419 [10.1007/s11270-010-0596-5].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/29883
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